Sir Alan Parker, the celebrated director of films such as Bugsy Malone, Evita, and Midnight Express, has died at the age of 76.
The filmmaker died on Friday in London after a long illness, according to a statement from his family.
Parker was one of Britain’s most successful directors.
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His diverse body of work also includes Fame, Mississippi Burning, The Commitments, Angel Heart and Angela’s Ashes.
Together, his movies won 10 Academy Awards and 19 British Academy Film Awards.
Parker was born in London in in 1944 and, like many other aspiring British directors including Ridley Scott, began his career in advertising.
He moved into television with critically acclaimed 1974 drama The Evacuees, which won an international Emmy Award.
The next year he wrote and directed his first feature, Bugsy Malone, an unusual and exuberant musical pastiche of gangster films with a cast of children, including a young Jodie Foster.
He followed that with Midnight Express, the story based on an American’s harrowing incarceration in a Turkish prison. It won two Oscars and gained Parker a Best Director nomination.
Parker ranged widely across subjects and genres. Shoot the Moon was a family drama, Angel Heart an occult thriller, and Mississippi Burning a powerful civil rights drama that was nominated for seven Academy Awards.
Parker was a notable director of musicals, a genre he both embraced and expanded. Fame was a gritty but celebratory story of life at a performing arts high school; Pink Floyd – The Wall was a surreal rock opera; The Commitments charted a ramshackle Dublin soul band; and Evita cast Madonna as Argentina’s first lady Eva Peron in a big-screen version of Andrew Lloyd Webber’s stage musical.
Parker also championed Britain’s film industry, serving as the chairman of the British Film Institute and the UK Film Council. He was knighted by the Queen in 2002.
Fellow filmmaker David Puttnam said Parker “was my oldest and closest friend – I was always in awe of his talent. My life, and those of many others who loved and respected him will never be the same again.”
He is survived by his wife Lisa Moran-Parker, his children Lucy, Alexander, Jake, Nathan and Henry, and seven grandchildren.
The Associated Press contributed to this report